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Agricultural fibre fuel pellets

a technology of fibre fuel pellets and fibres, applied in the field of pellets, can solve the problems of serious clinker formation, easy mold formation, and serious fouling problems

Inactive Publication Date: 2008-07-24
EVERGREEN BIOFUELS
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  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Description
  • Claims
  • Application Information

AI Technical Summary

Benefits of technology

[0024]An important advantage of corn bran as a feedstock for fuel pellets is that during the corn milling process substantially all of the water soluble alkalis in the corn bran are removed. This results in the very low ash content of less than 1% in the corn bran.
[0030]It has also been found to be advantageous to condition the corn bran feedstock with steam before it enters the pellet mill, e.g. steam at a temperature of about 160 F to about 300° F. or more depending on the cell structure of the agriculture fibre. This preconditioned corn bran when extruded through the die of the pellet mill shows the excellent bonding characteristics of the fibre without the addition of additional binding agents. Thus, the pellets obtained are all substantially pure natural material.

Problems solved by technology

If they are harvested at below 16% moisture content, they may not require additional drying, otherwise they are susceptible to the formation of mold during storage.
The inventors acknowledge that these fuels present a serious problem of clinker formation from ash.
Alkali in the ash of annual crop biomass fuels can create a serious fouling problem and a particularly troublesome alkali is potassium.
Another difficulty with biomass fuel pellets is the formation of pellets that will resist crumbling.
This is undesirable because the binding agents raise the cost and they may include components that when burned form atmospheric pollutants and or promote clinker formation.
Like starch, fiber is made up of carbohydrate polymers with sugars as their basic building blocks, but the structure of fiber is more varied and complex.
This also increases the ash content, so that these pellets can not be used in typical pellet stove combustion processes.
They act as the glue that holds silica to silica, forming a mass of slag or clinker, which leads to a host of other negative combustion issues.

Method used

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Examples

Experimental program
Comparison scheme
Effect test

example 1

[0033]Samples of corn were obtained from U.S.A. and Quebec, Canada. These samples had the following properties:

U.S. CornQuebec CornHumidity - %13.8711.13Ash - %1.411.23Water soluble sodium - mg / kg3025Water soluble chloride - mg / kg580495Water soluble potassium30603160

example 2

[0034]A sample of commercial corn bran was obtained from the Casco division of Corn Products International. This had been produced by a routine commercial corn wet milling process. The corn bran had an ash content of 0.73% and a calorific value of 8365 BTU / lb.

[0035]This corn bran was made into pellets using a two HP laboratory model California Pellet Mill. The die used had a diameter of ⅛ inches and a length of 2.5 inches, and produced cylindrical pellets having a diameter of ¼ inches and a length of ¾ inches.

[0036]The pellets were combusted in a pellet stove which was highly sensitive to high ash fuels pellets, containing higher levels of alkali metals like potassium and chlorides. Each stove was charged with 40 pounds of the pellets and no clinkers were formed during combustion of the fibre pellets.

example 3

[0037]A pelleting trial on 13MT of corn fiber was run (approximately 9.6% moisture and 7 kg / ft3 bulk density) using the CPM 3000 with die SN 83992 (040W560) (spec. 5 / 32″×2⅜″×VR (4)) and a combination CCE and helical CE shell. The die was only 1-2 weeks old. Outside temperature was 4° C. and the product temperature was approximately 17° C. They ran with the rolls a bit further from the die face than normally for feed. The mill ran very smoothly and they were able to pelletize easily at temperatures of 100° C. They ran at 100% feeder speed which gave us approximately 4.5 MT / Hr through-put and 75% amp load. A large die / low horsepower pellet mill set up would be important to consider. Note that by going to a ′ / ″ pellet, the open area of the die will increase and for a given die at the same time capacity the dwell time will automatically increase (approximately 10%). A 22.5″ diameter die or even 26″ would also contribute to better pellet quality. The remote roll feature could possibly ad...

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Abstract

A method of preparing fuel pellets includes the steps of providing a feedstock in the form of agricultural hull fibres having a moisture content of about 10 to about 16%; and compressing and extruding the agricultural fibre feedstock through a die to obtain fuel pellets in the form of small cylinders having a diameter of about ⅜ inch to ¾ inch or more, said pellets having an ash content of about 1.1% to about 20% by weight and a calorific value of about 7,000 BTUs per pound of fuel on a dry basis. The agricultural hull fibres may be derived from all whole grains and seeds. For example, are comprised of at least one of corn bran fibre, rye bran fibre; oat bran fibre, rice bran fibre, soy bran fibre, canola bran fibre and wheat bran fibre. The method may include the step of pre-treating the agricultural whole grain and seed hull fibre feedstock with high temperature steam before being formed into pellets at a sufficient temperature and sufficient time to activate hemicellulose within the fibre as a binding agent. The method may include the step of mixing the agricultural whole grain and seed hull fibre feedstock with a sequestering agent before being formed into pellets for sequestering alkali metal vapors and raising the fusion point of the inorganic elements during combustion of the pellets. The sequestering agent may be calcium carbonate added in amounts up to about 0.5% by weight. The pellets contain additives comprised of ammonium nitrate, calcium, manganese, magnesium, aluminum, barium, iron, potassium and amorphous silicate, which sequester potassium and chlorides and alter the fusion point of the inorganic elements present in the fuel.

Description

RELATED APPLICATIONS[0001]This application is a continuation of International Application No. PCT / CA2006 / 000791, filed on May 16, 2006 by the same inventors, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60 / 681,048, filed on May 16, 2005, by the same inventors, each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION[0002]This invention relates to fuel pellets produced from biomass material, in particular agricultural fibre.[0003]There is a growing interest in biomass materials, such as wood, wood byproducts, annual plants, etc. as a source of energy. For instance, wood residues such as sawdust are quite widely available in the form of small pellets. Wood residues from sawmills and wood processing industries typically have less than 1% mineral content. Wood comprises primarily three structural components: Cellulose (45-50% by weight), hemicelluloses (20-25%), and lignin (20-30%). Cellulose is a long, straight chain homopolym...

Claims

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Application Information

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Patent Type & Authority Applications(United States)
IPC IPC(8): C10L5/40
CPCC10L1/1233C10L1/1266C10L1/1291C10L5/363Y02E50/30C10L9/08C10L9/10Y02E50/10C10L5/44
Inventor DRISDELLE, MARKLAPOINTE, CLAUDE
Owner EVERGREEN BIOFUELS
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